2016-2017 Undergraduate Bulletin

Creative Writing Minor

 In many ways writing is the act of saying I, of imposing oneself upon other people, of saying listen to me, see it my way, change your mind.

I write entirely to find out what I’m thinking, what I’m looking at, what I see and what it means. What I want and what I fear.

--Joan Didion, Why I Write


Description. 
In the Creative Writing Minor, students will practice the craft of writing in a workshop setting. Creative writing is distinguished from academic writing in its focus on emotional experience as the foundation for expression.  In the areas of fiction, poetry, personal narrative, screenwriting and autobiography, students will use the close review and critique of the workshop format to produce truer and more effective writing.

In the gateway course, English 212, Introduction to Creative Writing, students will write in three principal genres – fiction, poetry, personal narrative – and learn to provide useful, craft-based critiques to help each writer get closer to the subject and theme of his/her work.  English 212 will also help students identify the creative genre they wish to pursue; subsequent courses will require more intensive writing and critique.  In 300-level courses, students will hone their narrative or poetic skills and share their work with experienced creative writers and readers. 

Writing well empowers the writer and the reader.  The Creative Writing Minor will help students find their unique voices, shape their experiences, and refine their literary presentations.  

Learning outcomes. Students will:

  • Refine their own writing voices through reading, peer critique and the habit of writing and revising; 
  • Develop an awareness of audience by presenting work in a public context, the workshop format;
  • Recognize by working through a series of drafts that revision is essential hard work in the creative process; 
  • Make informed structural and stylistic choices in their own writing in poetry, fiction and non-fiction;
  • Implement critical thinking skills by using fundamental elements of each genre to create meaning in their original work; and
  • Form a critical vocabulary with which to discuss and critique writing by professional and student writers and distinguish the conscious choices creative writers make. 
Minor coordinator. Professor Claudia Zuluaga, Department of English (646.557.4407, czuluaga@jjay.cuny.edu).

Admission to the minor. Completion of ENG 201 with a minimum grade of B-, or permission of the Creative Writing Minor Coordinator.

Requirements. Students must complete 18 credits (6 courses) in writing. Students may apply one 3–credit literature elective (200- or 300-level) or one 3-credit argument writing course (ENG 255) or one 3-credit grammar course (ENG 260) to satisfy the 18-credit requirement. A maximum of 2 courses can overlap with a student’s major, other minor or program.

Additional information. Students who enrolled for the first time at the College or selected this minor in September 2016 or thereafter must complete the minor in the form presented here. Students who enrolled prior to that date may choose the form shown here or the earlier version of the minor. A copy of the earlier version can be obtained in the 2015–2016 Undergraduate Bulletin.

Part One. Required Courses

ENG 212Introduction to Creative Writing

3

Choose one 300-level seminar course

ENG 313Advanced Fiction Writing

3

ENG 3XXAdvanced Screenwriting

3

ENG 3YYAdvanced Poetry Writing

3

ENG 320Writing Workshop in Autobiography: An Eye on the Self

3

Total Credit Hours: 6

Part Two. Writing Electives

Select four

ENG 215Poetry Writing and Reading

3

ENG 216Fiction Writing

3

ENG 221Screenwriting for Film, Television, and Internet

3

ENG 245Creative Nonfiction

3

ENG 260Grammar, Syntax, and Style: Writing for All Disciplines

3

ENG 313Advanced Fiction Writing

3

ENG 320Writing Workshop in Autobiography: An Eye on the Self

3

ENG 380Selected Topics in Creative Writing

3

ENG 3XXAdvanced Screenwriting

3

ENG 3YYAdvanced Poetry Writing

3

LIT 270Reading and Writing Children's Literature

3


In addition to the courses listed above, students can apply one course from the following list to Part Two as one of the four elective courses.

ENG 255Argument Writing

3

ENG 260Grammar, Syntax, and Style: Writing for All Disciplines

3

Any 200-level or above LIT course

3


Total Credit Hours: 12

Total Credit Hours: 18